Nemesis (18 page)

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Authors: Isaac Asimov

BOOK: Nemesis
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Of course, there was a limit to how closely he could melt into any Settlement. No matter how he matched its population superficially, he still had a distinctive accent of speech, he could not remain as graceful as they under changes of gravitational pull, he could not skim along as they did in low gravity. In a dozen ways, he betrayed himself on each Settlement he visited, and always they withdrew from him just slightly, even though, in each case, he had gone through quarantine and medical treatment before being allowed to even enter the Settlement proper.

Of course, he remained on each Settlement only a few
days to a few weeks. Never was he expected to remain on a Settlement on a semipermanent basis or to build himself a family there as he had done on Rotor. But then Rotor had had hyper-assistance, and since then Earth had been looking for items of narrower importance, or at least he had been sent on tasks of narrower importance.

He had been back now for three months. There was no word of a new assignment and he was not anxious for one. He was tired of the uprooting, tired of not fitting in, tired of the pretense of being a tourist.

And there was Garand Wyler, his old friend and colleague, fresh from a Settlement of his own and staring at him with tired eyes. The dark skin of his graceful hand glimmered in the light as he raised his sleeve to his nose for a moment, then let it drop.

Fisher half-smiled. He knew the gesture, had gone through it himself. Each Settlement had its own characteristic odor, depending on the crops it grew, the spices it used, the perfumes it affected, the very nature of the machinery and lubricants it used. It quickly went unnoticed, but on the return to Earth, the Settlement odor clung to one quite detectably. And though the person might be bathed, and the clothing washed so that others did not notice, one still noticed the smell on himself.

Fisher said, “Welcome back. How was your Settlement this time?”

“As always—terrible. Old Man Tanayama is correct. What all the Settlements fear and hate most is variety. They don’t want differences in appearance, tastes, ways, and life. They select themselves for uniformity and despise everything else.”

Fisher said, “You’re right. And it’s too bad.”

Wyler said, “That’s a mild, unfeeling way of putting it. Too bad.’ ‘Oops, I dropped the dish. Oh, too bad.’ ‘Whoops, my contact seal is out of line. Oh, too bad.’ We’re talking humanity here. We’re talking about Earth’s long struggle to find a way of living together, all cultures, all appearances. It isn’t perfect yet, but compare it to how it was even a century ago, and it’s heaven. Then, when we get a chance to move into space, we shuck it all off and move right back into the Dark Ages. And you say, ‘Too bad.’ That’s some reaction to something that’s an enormous tragedy.”

“I agree,” said Fisher, “but unless you can tell me something practical I can do about it, what does it matter how eloquently I denounce it? You were at Akruma, weren’t you?”

“Yes,” said Wyler.

“Did they know about the Neighbor Star?”

“Certainly. As far as I know, the news has now reached every Settlement.”

“Were they concerned?”

“Not a bit. Why should they be? They’ve got thousands of years. Long before the Neighbor Star is anywhere near, and if it should seem to be dangerous, which isn’t absolutely certain, you know, they can wander off. They can all wander off. They admire Rotor, and only wait for a chance to get away themselves.” Wyler was frowning, his tone bitter.

He went on, “They’ll all leave, and we’ll be stuck. How are we going to build enough Settlements for eight billion human beings and get them all away?”

“You sound just like Tanayama. What good will it do us to chase them down and punish them, or destroy them? We’ll still be here and we’ll still be stuck. If they all stayed behind like good kids and faced the Neighbor Star with us, would we be better off?”

“You’re cold about this, Crile. Tanayama is hot, and I’m on his side. He’s hot enough to pull the Galaxy apart if necessary to find hyper-assistance on our own. He wants it so we can chase after Rotor and blow them out of space, but even if that does no good, we’re going to need hyper-assistance to get as many people off Earth as possible if it turns out that the Neighbor Star will make it necessary. So what Tanayama is doing is right, even if his motives are wrong.”

“And suppose we have hyper-assistance and then we find we only have the time and the resources to get a billion people off. Which is the billion that goes? And what happens if those who are in charge start saving only their own kind?”

Wyler growled, “It doesn’t bear thinking of.”

“It doesn’t,” agreed Fisher. “Let’s be glad we’ll be long gone before even the barest beginning can be made.”

“If it comes to that,” said Wyler, his voice suddenly dropping. “The barest beginning may already have been
made. I suspect we have hyper-assistance now, or just about have it.”

Fisher’s expression was one of deep cynicism. “What makes you think that? Dreams? Intuition?”

“No. I know a woman whose sister knows someone on the Old Man’s staff. Will that do you?”

“Of course not. You’ll have to give me more than that.”

“I’m not in a position to. Look, Crile, I’m your friend. You know I helped you get back your status in the Office.”

Crile nodded. “I do and I appreciate it. And I’ve tried to make an adequate return now and then.”

“You have done so and I appreciate that. Now what I want to do is give you some information which is supposed to be confidential and which I think you will find useful and important. Are you ready to accept it and keep me clear?”

“Always ready.”

“You know what we’ve been doing, of course,”

Fisher said, “Yes.” It was the kind of useless, rhetorical question that required no other answer.

For five years agents of the Office (for the last three years, Fisher among them) had been rummaging in the informational garbage heaps of the Settlements. Scavenging.

Every Settlement was working on hyper-assistance, just as Earth itself was, ever since the word had leaked out that Rotor had it, and
certainly
ever since Rotor had proved the fact by leaving the Solar System.

Presumably most Settlements, perhaps all, had obtained some scrap of what it was that Rotor had done. By the Open Science Agreement, each one of those scraps should have been laid on the table and if all were then put together, it might have meant practical hyper-assistance for all. That, however, was clearly too much to ask in this particular case. There was no telling what useful side effects might be born of the new technique and no Settlement could abandon the hope that it might be first in the field and, in this way, gain an important lead on the others in one way or another. So each hoarded what it had—if it had anything—and not one of them had enough.

And Earth itself, with its vastly elaborate Terrestrial
Board of Inquiry, sniffed at all the Settlements indiscriminately. Earth was fishing, and Fisher, appropriately enough, was one of the fishermen.

Wyler said slowly, “We’ve put what we’ve got together and I gather it’s enough. We’ll be able to have hyper-assisted travel. And I’m thinking we’ll go out to the Neighbor Star. Wouldn’t you want to be on that trip when it goes out there?”

“Why do I want to be on it, Garand? If there’s going to be such a trip, which I doubt.”

“I’m pretty sure there will be. I can’t give you my source, but take my word for it, it’s reliable. And, of course, you’ll want to make the trip. You might see your wife. Or if not her—your kid.”

Fisher moved restlessly. It seemed to him he spent half his days now trying not to think of those eyes. Marlene would be six years old now, talking in a quiet deliberate way—like Roseanne. Seeing through people—like Roseanne.

He said, “You’re talking nonsense, Garand. Even if there were such a flight, why would they let me be on it? They would send specialists of one sort or another. Besides, if there’s one person the Old Man will keep off, it’s me. He may have let me get back into the Office and given me assignments, but you know how he is about failures, and I certainly failed him on Rotor.”

“Yes, but that’s the very point. That’s what makes you a specialist. If he’s going after Rotor, how can he fail to include the one Earthman who lived on Rotor for four years? Who would understand Rotor better and who would know better how to deal with them? Ask to see him. Point this out, but remember, you’re not supposed to know that we have hyper-assistance. Just talk possibilities, make use of the subjunctive. And don’t drag me into it in any way. I’m not supposed to know about it either.”

Fisher’s brow furrowed in thought. Was it possible? He dared not hope.

30.

The next day, while Fisher was still wondering whether to risk asking for an interview with Tanayama, the decision was taken out of his hands. He was summoned.

A simple agent is rarely summoned by the Director. There are plenty of deputies to grind away at them. And if an agent
is
summoned by the Old Man, it is almost never good news. So Crile Fisher prepared himself with grim resignation for an assignment as an inspector of the fertilizer factories.

Tanayama looked up at him from behind his desk. Fisher had seen him only rarely and briefly in the three years since Earth’s discovery of the Neighbor Star, and he seemed unchanged. He had been small and shriveled for so long that there seemed no room for any further physical change. The sharpness of his eyes had not abated either, nor the withered grim set of his lips. He might even be wearing the same garments he had worn three years before. Fisher could not tell.

But if the harsh voice, too, was the same, the tone was surprising. Apparently, in the face of astronomical odds, the Old Man had called him in for the purpose of praising him.

Tanayama said in his queer, and not altogether unpleasant, distortion of Planetary English, “Fisher, you have done well. I want you to hear that from me.”

Fisher, standing (he had not been invited to sit down), managed to suppress his small start of surprise.

The Director said, “There can be no public celebration of this, no laser-beam parade, no holographic procession. It is not in the nature of things. But I tell you this.”

“That is quite enough, Director,” said Fisher. “I thank you.”

Tanayama stared fixedly at Fisher out of his narrow eyes. Finally, he said, “And is that all you have to say? No questions?”

“I presume, Director, you will tell me what I need to know.”

“You are an agent, a capable man. What have you found out for yourself?”

“Nothing, Director. I do not seek to find out anything but what I am instructed to find out.”

Tanayama’s small head nodded very slightly. “An appropriate answer, but I seek inappropriate ones. What have you guessed?”

“You seem pleased with me, Director, and it may
therefore be that I have brought in some information that has proved useful to you.”

“In what respect?”

“I think nothing would prove more useful to you than having obtained the technique of hyper-assistance.”

Tanayama’s mouth made a noiseless: “Ah-h-h.” He said, “And next? Assuming this to be so, what are we to do next?”

“Travel to the Neighbor Star. Locate Rotor.”

“Nothing better than that? That is all there is to do? You see no farther?”

And at this point, Fisher decided it would be foolish not to gamble. He could not possibly be handed a better opportunity. “One thing better; that, when the first Earth vessel goes out of the Solar System by means of hyper-assistance, I be on it.”

Fisher had scarcely said that when he knew his gamble was lost—or at least not won. Tanayama’s face darkened. He said in a sharply imperative tone, “Sit down!”

Fisher could hear the soft movement of the chair behind him, rolling toward him at the words of Tanayama, words that its primitive computerized motor could understand.

Fisher sat down, without looking behind him to make certain the chair was there. To have done so would have been insulting and, at the present moment, there was no room to insult Tanayama.

Tanayama said, “Why do you want to be on the vessel?”

With an effort, Fisher kept his voice level. “Director, I have a wife on Rotor.”

“A wife you abandoned five years ago. Do you think she would welcome you back?”

“Director, I have a child.”

“She was one year old when you left. Do you think she knows she has a father? Or cares?”

Fisher was silent. These were points that he had thought about himself, over and over.

Tanayama waited briefly, then said, “But there will be no flight to the Neighbor Star. There will be no vessel for you to be on.”

Again, Fisher had to suppress surprise. He said, “Forgive me, Director. You did not say we had hyper-assistance.
You said, ‘Assuming this to be so—’ I should have noted your choice of words.”

“So you should have done. So you should always do. Nevertheless, we do have hyper-assistance. We can now move through space, just as Rotor has done; or at least we will, once we build a vehicle and are sure the design is adequate, and all its features workable—which may take a year or two. But then what? Are you seriously suggesting we take it to the Neighbor Star?”

Fisher said cautiously, “Surely that is an option, Director.”

“A useless one. Think it out, man. The Neighbor Star is over two light-years away. No matter how skillfully we make use of hyper-assistance, it will take us more than two years to arrive there. Our theoreticians now tell me that while hyper-assistance will allow a ship to go faster than light for brief periods of time—the faster, the briefer—the end result is always that it cannot reach any point in space faster than a ray of light would have, if the two had started from the same point of origin.”

“But if that is so—”

“If that is so, you would be forced to remain on a spaceship in close quarters with several other crewpeople for over two years. Do you think you can endure that? You know very well that small ships have never made long trips. What we need is a Settlement, a structure large enough to provide a reasonable environment—like Rotor. How long will that take?”

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